• You are currently viewing our forum as a guest, which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community, you will have access to additional post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), view blogs, respond to polls, upload content, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please join our community today! Just click here to register. You should turn your Ad Blocker off for this site or certain features may not work properly. If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us by clicking here.

The opportunity cost trap

INTJMom

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 28, 2007
Messages
5,413
MBTI Type
INTJ
Enneagram
5w4
Thankfully it is better up here (somewhat, still - we tend to lag, so who knows)...

But I don't have any debt and do have the money saved up... It isn't about not being able to do it, it's about having to give up my future earnings that kills me. But, I worked it out in easy terms - projects I could do by saving money vs projects I would take after my degree.

Doesn't even compare. Opportunity cost wins again!
Well, there's nothing wrong with that.
To me it proves you're not foolish.
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
Well, there's nothing wrong with that.
To me it proves you're not foolish.

I like to think so... but life isn't just about the numbers. I could face burnout, wasted time and all sorts of other things that I can't account for properly :(

That's really the 'trap' - you get into a line of work that you aren't happy with, so you end up being somewhat miserable all the time... but changing means you would have to start over, which also would make you miserable.

I can measure the money, but I can't measure if I'd be happier moving to a small down and making peanuts, but living a relaxed life... or if I will optimize my happiness by working up the ladder, retiring early and taking on all those projects I couldn't do if I lived the relaxed life.

In reality, I know, I wouldn't be happier in either case - but the removal of stress would make me happier, so there is a constant pressure to leave, knowing this. What value do the practical concerns have, really, if I'd be as happy making half as much money? Money does by some degree of happiness, but only in orders of magnitude... which is a lot less than having a simple life.

It's all a big jumble in my mind. I know numbers, but I don't know emotions :D

(By simple, I mean carefree - not worrying about jumping from one thing to the next)
 

INTJMom

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 28, 2007
Messages
5,413
MBTI Type
INTJ
Enneagram
5w4
I like to think so... but life isn't just about the numbers. I could face burnout, wasted time and all sorts of other things that I can't account for properly :(

That's really the 'trap' - you get into a line of work that you aren't happy with, so you end up being somewhat miserable all the time... but changing means you would have to start over, which also would make you miserable.

I can measure the money, but I can't measure if I'd be happier moving to a small down and making peanuts, but living a relaxed life... or if I will optimize my happiness by working up the ladder, retiring early and taking on all those projects I couldn't do if I lived the relaxed life.

In reality, I know, I wouldn't be happier in either case - but the removal of stress would make me happier, so there is a constant pressure to leave, knowing this. What value do the practical concerns have, really, if I'd be as happy making half as much money? Money does by some degree of happiness, but only in orders of magnitude... which is a lot less than having a simple life.

It's all a big jumble in my mind. I know numbers, but I don't know emotions :D

(By simple, I mean carefree - not worrying about jumping from one thing to the next)
Tough call, it sounds like.

You could try asking some people who know you and love you... like your parents if you still have them... or trusted mature friends...

I am reminded of a wise proverb:
"In an abundance of counselors there is safety."
 

Grayscale

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 20, 2007
Messages
1,965
MBTI Type
ISTP
i think this boils down to an almost entirely value based decision.

i can comment because i am in almost the exact same position as you... my current job is enviable in many ways, but i dont find it fulfilling, and i want to go to college to study mechanical engineering. hell, im even giving serious consideration to something like firefighting and EMT work... that pays even less.

the difference is that it didnt take me much deliberating to decide that i didnt care how much less i'd make as long as im taking my life in the direction that i want.

most people consider me "lucky" to have my job at my current age, on the contrary, i think i have my job because i am a smart person, and i think i am lucky to have my job because it allowed me to realize at a very early age that i could never place a premium on income when choosing a career. i feel as if ive been able to fast forward and see that there isn't any cheese at the end of the rat race. it's not about identity (i dont believe people should be identified by their career) it's just math--for the working years, i will spend about 35% of my time at my job. nearly 1/3 of my life... no amount of money is worth wasting that part of my life doing something unfulfilling.

maybe the choices you have aren't so drastic for you, but to me, it seems like this sort of thing is best summed up by a mugger, "what's it gonna be, your money or your life?" when it comes down to it, money is just paper. you cant ask what the financial sacrifices are, you have to ask what that financial sacrifice will equate to pragmatically speaking. how does that compare to the chronological cost, so to speak, of staying where youre at... because time is one thing you cannot buy more of.
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
the difference is that it didnt take me much deliberating to decide that i didnt care how much less i'd make as long as im taking my life in the direction that i want.

:) So, have you made the change?

I guess I should also ask - are you married/have kids? (I ask because one component of the opportunity cost is that you have to give up your income, which will impact on family). My wife is pretty flexible, so that's too much of a concern, but it does make me consider the cost more... holistically.

You are right though... I need to change something... the question is what.
 

Grayscale

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 20, 2007
Messages
1,965
MBTI Type
ISTP
i do not, but i have considered the future implications of making less and having a family. if i became a paramedic, it would almost guarantee that she would have to do at least some work on the side as well.

right now i am saving money and planning on taking some entrance prerequisite classes, if i decide to go to college i dont want to have to use any loans. at the same time, i am also just trying to make a decision between something that will cater to my thinking ability (engineering) or something where i can escape the corporate environment and do something very active and hands-on. so far i have done very well with out a lot of formal education, im also wondering whether college is the thing for me or not. im afraid im going to get into engineering and that it will turn out that i just end up being another corporate pawn instead of actually being able to creatively invent.

right there with you, though... i need a change, preferably before i lose my hair doing this sort of thing.
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
i do not, but i have considered the future implications of making less and having a family. if i became a paramedic, it would almost guarantee that she would have to do at least some work on the side as well.

right now i am saving money and planning on taking some entrance prerequisite classes, if i decide to go to college i dont want to have to use any loans. at the same time, i am also just trying to make a decision between something that will cater to my thinking ability (engineering) or something where i can escape the corporate environment and do something very active and hands-on. so far i have done very well with out a lot of formal education, im also wondering whether college is the thing for me or not. im afraid im going to get into engineering and that it will turn out that i just end up being another corporate pawn instead of actually being able to creatively invent.

right there with you, though... i need a change, preferably before i lose my hair doing this sort of thing.

You sound just like me, except I dropped out a couple of times, heh. That wasn't for me either - in many ways, I still don't know what is. At some level I enjoy the hobbies I have, but I lose a lot of interest if I'm not stressed at work. And when stress becomes too much, I lose interest. It's only when I'm bored that all of these issues come up.

Judging from what was said here, engineering isn't going to be the thing for me... which at some level I kind of knew, but really needed it pointed out to me.

I've also had no problems with jobs - if I judge by statistics, I'd say I've done incredibly well. Well enough that going back for engineering would likely see a pay cut :shock: Course, how stable I am... that's a bit different. And I pay a price to offset any success I've had... lots of stress, etc.

Hah, stress indeed. I started losing my hair really early :p Even the doctor said it was likely to be triggered by stress (although you can recover from that, it seems like there is interplay between genetics and stress :cry:). This was... before I was 20, even.

*sigh* Always a price to pay, I suppose.
 

Xander

Lex Parsimoniae
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,463
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
9w8
All of which I agree with - and I do have a lot of projects that I enjoy working on (I've taken the CNC thing seriously, from above - great idea).

It's a matter of time and ability. My attitude was to get the ability and find a job that would pay me to do it :D I actually figured that it would pay off in the long run with a higher salary, but that doesn't seem to be the case, making the whole thing pointless.


I've dropped the engineering idea. I've worked through it several times and it doesn't work out, emotionally or pratically. I have to suck up the next few years, perhaps, and then look towards my projects on a larger scale.
You looked into CNC? :eek:

Well to put it succinctly... I think you need to enter into your self G91 and quit working in G90.

:D
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
You looked into CNC? :eek:

Well to put it succinctly... I think you need to enter into your self G91 and quit working in G90.

:D

For my 3 axis machine, I'll be looking just at g90. Incremental won't happen until/if I build a larger machine and/or add another axis (or more :D ).

Not having a workshop means I have to keep it small still. I'd probably add an A axis so that I can lathe properly, if anything, but I might keep it as a pure lathe (x,z,A) yet.

Heh, my place is too small for my big dreams.
 

Xander

Lex Parsimoniae
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,463
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
9w8
For my 3 axis machine, I'll be looking just at g90. Incremental won't happen until/if I build a larger machine and/or add another axis (or more :D ).

Not having a workshop means I have to keep it small still. I'd probably add an A axis so that I can lathe properly, if anything, but I might keep it as a pure lathe (x,z,A) yet.

Heh, my place is too small for my big dreams.
:doh: I was being sarcastic.

What I meant was you're being too literal and linear. So you want to do civil engineering but your workshop is too small... so what? Build your self a scale model of the bloomin firth of fourth in your garden. Take up model railways as a hobby and do the large scale stuff so you can really flex your construction skills.

Oh and if you're nose wrinkles at those prospects then perhaps it's not civil engineering you are actually interested in but more specific projects?
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
:doh: I was being sarcastic.

What I meant was you're being too literal and linear. So you want to do civil engineering but your workshop is too small... so what? Build your self a scale model of the bloomin firth of fourth in your garden. Take up model railways as a hobby and do the large scale stuff so you can really flex your construction skills.

Oh and if you're nose wrinkles at those prospects then perhaps it's not civil engineering you are actually interested in but more specific projects?

Heh, the CNC machine is just the tool :) It allows me to do a lot more than just have a CNC machine - such as percise architectural design, as well as machining for my more mechanical projects.

For example, I'd need a pretty large scale CNC machine in order to build my negative form for my submarine :D (This is partially a joke - my first project will be a scale model of my submarine <_<)

(The advice I'm taking is: If you like building things, get a mini-lathe and mill and convert it to CNC! That's what I'm doing, when I have time. The combo will allow you to create almost any other machines you can think of. After looking into it, I realised that it does indeed do just that, so I'm starting small and working it out for now.)
 

Xander

Lex Parsimoniae
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,463
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
9w8
Heh, the CNC machine is just the tool :) It allows me to do a lot more than just have a CNC machine - such as percise architectural design, as well as machining for my more mechanical projects.

For example, I'd need a pretty large scale CNC machine in order to build my negative form for my submarine :D (This is partially a joke - my first project will be a scale model of my submarine <_<)

(The advice I'm taking is: If you like building things, get a mini-lathe and mill and convert it to CNC! That's what I'm doing, when I have time. The combo will allow you to create almost any other machines you can think of. After looking into it, I realised that it does indeed do just that, so I'm starting small and working it out for now.)
What I'm saying is that if you like building stuff then quit running around wondering how you can make money. You already make enough (as far as I can tell). So just get building.

Oh and whilst you're there I'll take a condo in South Carolina. No rush. Anytime before Chrismas is fine.

:D
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
What I'm saying is that if you like building stuff then quit running around wondering how you can make money. You already make enough (as far as I can tell). So just get building.

Oh and whilst you're there I'll take a condo in South Carolina. No rush. Anytime before Chrismas is fine.

:D

Hah, well, money is tight because I'm putting my wife through school at the moment ;) And time it tight because I'm also doing school. So yah, now is not the... most conductive... time to get into things.

I wasn't worried about making money - the CNC thing is my project, so to speak, which will help me with others :D
 

Xander

Lex Parsimoniae
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,463
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
9w8
Hah, well, money is tight because I'm putting my wife through school at the moment ;) And time it tight because I'm also doing school. So yah, now is not the... most conductive... time to get into things.

I wasn't worried about making money - the CNC thing is my project, so to speak, which will help me with others :D
I'm just not getting why you felt the need to expand your hobby into a career if you've already got one..

Oh and don't worry, once your woman has finished that finishing school she'll know how to properly take care of you so you'll have lots more spare time. It's expensive but it should be worth it in the long run.
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
I'm just not getting why you felt the need to expand your hobby into a career if you've already got one..

Because a hobby is something I enjoy, while the career isn't ;)

Oh and don't worry, once your woman has finished that finishing school she'll know how to properly take care of you so you'll have lots more spare time. It's expensive but it should be worth it in the long run.

Cost analysis says yes! :D She was also willing to support me through school, if I wanted (after she was done, I mean)... but I don't see that happening now.
 

Xander

Lex Parsimoniae
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,463
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
9w8
Because a hobby is something I enjoy, while the career isn't ;)
Suggestion... spend less time at work :D

If changing your career makes no sense then how about changing your approach? I mean if we started talking sick days... just how many can you get without attracting too much attention?

:devil:
Cost analysis says yes! :D She was also willing to support me through school, if I wanted (after she was done, I mean)... but I don't see that happening now.
She's going to finishing school!!! :eek:

Where did you find her?
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
Suggestion... spend less time at work :D

If changing your career makes no sense then how about changing your approach? I mean if we started talking sick days... just how many can you get without attracting too much attention?

:devil:

Hah! Been there, done that... I get decent vacation too, don't get me wrong. But the job needs to be 'done', and that means that excuses don't get me very far. There is definitely a tradeoff between being paid well and ensuring you keep your job ;)

She's going to finishing school!!! :eek:

Where did you find her?

Mutual friend :D
 
Top